Category:New Zealand building and structure stubs

This category is for stub articles relating to buildings and structures in New Zealand. You can help by expanding them. To add an article to this category, use {{NewZealand-struct-stub}} instead of {{stub}}.

1.
Adam Art Gallery
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The Adam Art Gallery is the purpose-built gallery of Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. Located in Wellington, New Zealands capital city, it is where the Victoria University Art Collection is managed, the original proposal for the Gallery was prepared by Jenny Harper and Tina Barton on 15 July 1997. The stairs were built in the mid-1960s to link different buildings and it has an unusual design, being tall and comparatively narrow, a result of the hillside location. This means that there are many gallery spaces, linked with open space and it holds exhibitions, performances, lectures and talks. Since opening in 1999, the Adam Art Gallery has presented a programme of exhibitions and events by local and international artists. de and these exhibitions were accompanied by a programme of talks, workshops, forums and lectures. The gallery publishes catalogues to accompany its programme, the Adam Art Gallery is free. Official website Take Five, Including We Will Work With You. and NZ Sculpture Onshore, New Zealand Listener

2.
Akoranga Busway Station
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Akoranga Station is in Northcote, New Zealand, on the Northern Busway. It is adjacent to the Akoranga Campus of the Auckland University of Technology and it has shelters, real-time information and passenger drop off and pick up. It opened on 2 February 2008, the closest busway station to Britomart Transport Centre and the Auckland Harbour Bridge, the next station northbound is Smales Farm Busway Station

3.
Aotea Centre
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The Aotea Centre is a performing arts and events centre / theatre in the Auckland CBD, Auckland City, New Zealand. Located at the edge of Aotea Square, off Queen Street. The main construction of the centre was finished in 1989, having cost NZ$128.5 million, the centre officially opened the following year. Designed by the City architect Ewen Wainscott in 1974, this building was not actually built until the late 1980s and it won the NZIA Silver Medal award. Costs escalated greatly during construction resulting in several features being omitted, due to poor acoustics the main auditorium required an expensive refit in the mid-1990s. In 2000 a design competition was held for the Aotea Precinct, in 2011, an upgrade of Aotea Square also included a major facelift of the public stairs in front of the centre, including creating a cafe space under a large veranda open to the square. Photographs of Aotea Square held in Auckland Libraries heritage collections

4.
Auckland Savings Bank Building
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Built in 1884 and located at 260 Queen Street, Auckland, this building was formerly owned by the Auckland Savings Bank. In 1977, the became a McDonalds restaurant, the first in Auckland. Much of the facade and interiors have been renovated and the bank vault still remains in use as a stockroom. Designed by Edward Bartley, the facade was inspired by Italian Renaissance palazzi and it is one of the few remaining buildings on Queen Street that is over a hundred years old

5.
Cape Campbell Lighthouse
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Cape Campbell Lighthouse is a lighthouse at Cape Campbell in the Marlborough region of the South Island of New Zealand. It is owned and operated by Maritime New Zealand, the original lighthouse at this site was first lit on 1 August 1870. However, this lighthouse was constructed of timber, and in 1898 these timbers were found to be decaying and this led to the construction of the current cast iron tower, which began operating in October 1905. The light was originally fuelled by oil, in 1938 the oil lamp was replaced with an electric one powered by a local diesel generator. This was subsequently replaced by a connection to the grid in the 1960s. The light was automated in 1986 and is now managed from a control room in Wellington. It featured in the 2016 film The Light Between Oceans, list of lighthouses in New Zealand Cape Campbell Lighthouse Profile Lighthouses of New Zealand Maritime New Zealand

6.
Carrigafoyle, Wellington
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The Carrigafoyle is a historic building in Wellington, New Zealand. The house was designed by Penty & Blake Carrigafoyle for Elizabeth OConnor, daughter of the Hon John Martin, the building was restored in the 1980s by Rex Nicholls. It is flanked by an art deco building bearing the same name, the building, is classified as a Category 1 historic place by Heritage New Zealand

7.
Cathedral of the Holy Spirit, Palmerston North
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The Cathedral of the Holy Spirit is the cathedral of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Palmerston North, New Zealand. It was opened in 1925 as St Patricks Church and was rededicated to the Holy Spirit as the cathedral when the diocese was established in 1980, in 1988 the cathedral was renovated, added to and reordered. The building was designed by the notable architect Frederick de Jersey Clere, the building was designated a Category 1 historic place by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust in 1990. Media related to Cathedral of the Holy Spirit, Palmerston North at Wikimedia Commons

8.
The Cloud, Auckland
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The Cloud is a multi-purpose event venue located on Queens Wharf on the Auckland waterfront, in Auckland, New Zealand. Built as one of the centrepieces of the hospitality and party facilities for the Rugby World Cup 2011, it can host up to 6,000 people. It was designed by Jasmax and built by Fletcher Construction, in the compromise solution, rather than demolishing both sheds, one was saved and will be retained as a separate venue space directly next to The Cloud. As of late 2012, the consensus is that the building remain on the wharf at least for the medium term. Auckland Regional Council has held this building as a party central for many events including the Rugby World Cup. It is unconfirmed whether this will be used to play Rugby World Cup finals in the future, photographs of The Cloud held in Auckland Libraries heritage collections

9.
Daisy Hill Farm House
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Daisy Hill Farm House is a historic building in Johnsonville, Wellington, New Zealand. The house was built in about 1860 for Robert Bould, a pioneer farmer and he came to New Zealand with the New Zealand Company in the early 1840s and bought land, for a sheep farm, in Johnsonville in 1853. Between the wars, the farm became a dairy farm, run by Hayes. The land supported nearly forty Jerseys, brindles and Ayrshires without extra crops for feed, built in a simplified Georgian style it is one of the few remaining houses of this type in Wellington. The building, is classified as a Category I historic place by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust

10.
Dixon Street Flats
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Dixon Street Flats is a historic building in Wellington, New Zealand designed by the Housing Division of the Ministry of Works. The Dixon Street Flats in central Wellington were completed in 1944 as part of the first Labour Governments state housing program and they were designed by the chief architect of the Department of Housing Construction Gordon Wilson. It was awarded the NZIA gold medal in 1947 and it is considered to be the archetype of Modernist apartment blocks in New Zealand. The building was the first major building and first major apartment block to be completed in Wellington after the Second World War. Ten stories high, it contained 115 one-bedroom flats plus a two-bedroom caretakers flat, the building was classified in 1997 as a Category 1 historic place by Heritage New Zealand

The Adam Art Gallery (in Maori: Te Pātaka Toi) is the purpose-built gallery of Victoria University of Wellington, New …

Frontage of the Adam Art Gallery, looking approximately North. The gallery is a glass-fronted building, of which only the top floor is visible, with a red-roofed wing in the background. To the left of the gallery is the Old Kick building, to the right the portion of the Students' Union building currently occupied by the ANZ bank.